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About Sandy post. (Sandy, Oregon) 1938-current | View Entire Issue (April 21, 1977)
6 - SANDY (Ore.) POST Thurs.. April 21, 1977 (Sec 1) Future Farmers place In horticulture contest Cal-Western moves office The staff of Cal Western Life Iraurance Company has settled in as the second tenant of the recently completed Heritage Square complex in Sandy Cal-Western owner Bruce Cook and staff opened the new office last week afte r packing and moving the old office from the Oregon T ra il Building. Cal-W estern’s new facilities, which were decorated by Bruce’s wife, Kathy, are in the second story of the building above C ejka’s Coast-to-Coast Store Cook said his com pany specializes in life and group medical Insurance as well as business and estate planning. “ W e're kind of a spciaiized agency,’’ he said. “ And we can do a better job because w e’re specialized .” Cook said he started Cal- Western four years ago and at first ran the business as a single person office. His Sandy staff has now grown to six people and there are Cal-Western branch offices in Klam ath Falls, Salem and Beaverton. The Sandy office is corporate headquarters, Cook said. Cal Western does business in Oregon, California and Kansas City, Kan. I Jaycees meetings w ill still be I held in Cook’s office. Cook just completed a term as the Sandy- Hoodland Jaycee president. The Sandy High chapter of Future F arm ers of Am erica (F F A ) competed A p ril 11 at the district Horticulture Skills Contest at Clackamas Com m u n ity C o llege, p lacin g The four room office has been designed to fit the needs of i second The Sandy team members the growing company, said i Cook p ra c tic e d at 7 am in “ I think this area of town is preparation for the district kind of a hub,** he said, “ and contest They w ill continue the we wanted to be in the middle m o rn ing p ra c tic e s in of the hub ’’ preparation for the State Horticulture Contest held at Oregon State University in Corvallis M ay 7. F F A advisor L e t Geren reported that “ M any of the students work in the afternoon making the morning practices necessary. Moat of the students are in their second year in horticulture skills competition and we have good hopes of winning the state contest.’* The areas of competition include plant Judging and grading, plant identification, landscaping, turf grass, cut- tage, pruning, transplanting and potting, as well as a general knowledge test In all areas of horticulture. All the areas mentioned above are core areas of the horticulture curriculum at the high school level. Sandy F F A team members were Sue W orkinger, Dave C h a te la in . T e r i E dm onds, Yancy Sautner, M ike Agee. Bruce P arker and J ill Surface. Sue Workinger and Dave Chatelain placed third and fifth respectively, in the individual competition. BANG to consider amendments B O R IN G — The Boring Action Neighborhood Group Thursday w ill go over the zoning plan approved by the Clackamas County B o ard of Com missioners e a rlier this year. BANG w ill meet at 7:30 p.m at the Boring F ire Hall. The group w ill be developing amendments to the plan for presentation to the county board at a later date. BANG President Dick Welden said all persons who want changes in the current zoning of their land are encouraged to attend the meeting. C H A R LES S T O N E C IP H E R and Linda Simonis go over some of the company’s accounts in the second floor office in Heritage Square. (Post photo) M O N D A Y M O R N IN G staff meetings are now held in Bruce Cook’s office of Cal- Western Life Insurance Company in Heritage Square. The office was decorated by Bruce’s wife, Kathy. Conferring are Cook and employes Norman Becker and Rae Wheeler. (Post photo) The group also w ill consider a county recommendation to r^- FISHING SEASON IS HERE Qg >3 (T Piece Telescope Spin Rod »6.9 „ 7 f t - 4 Piece Spin-Fly C o m b in a tio n Rod THRIFTWAY • D an d y Teasers Nickel N /R H 25* R ooster Tails CANVAS CREELS 1/16 & 1/8 (Flecto Finish) Pkg. of 2 SNELLED BAIT HOOKS 3’ SPLIT no . 4, SHOT No. 7 M e ta l Fish S trin g e r Tube! j-» r 49T No. 6 No. 8 No. 10 LEADER WHEELS Pkg. County to ru ral and natural resources ( obituaries ) Joseph Harrell M em orial services for Joseph R H arrell, Brightwood, w ill be held Saturday at 2 p m in the chapel of Sandy Funeral Home. M r. H arrell waa horn in Kansas City, Kans , on Oct. 22. 1915. He was raised in Missouri and at an early age began working with his father and learning the trade of a cement finisher F or the last 20 years, he has lived in the Sandy area, con tinuing his life-long trade as a cement finisher. During this time he constructed the dam on Lady Creek near Rhododen dron. He also worked as an Instructor for the Job Corp at D e tr o it, teach ing cem ent finishing , A fter his retirem ent in 1972, he lived at Brightwood until four months ago when he moved to New Mexico because of health reasons M r. H a rre ll passed away on April 12, a t the age of 61 years. He J a ‘js u r v iv e W fb f ‘ his c h ild re n :! M e rto n H a rre ll, Washington, Joseph and Gary H a r r e ll, P o rtla n d ; R obert H a r r e ll, Texas, M ic h a e l H a r r e ll, W ash in g to n ; and Victoria Nelson In W ashington. two sisters: Wanda Hickerson, New Mexico; and Rachael Stone, Brightwood, and ten grandchildren. Glenn Hicks Glenn W. Hicks, a former Sandy resident, died April 10 in a Portland hospital at 06. Hicks was bom In Falls City, Neb., the son of V e m and L e b Hicks. In 1931 he m arried Alice Boggs in Concordia. Kan He moved to Oregon in 1931, working in the dry cleaning business He lived in Sandy and Booverton and from 1962-75 worked as a security guard at Providence Hospital. Survivors include: his w ife of Beaverton; children, M arilyn Layng of Boring, Carol H lrt of Medford, Lt Fred Hicks of San Diego; a ab ler, L e b Hicks of Beaverton; and eight grand children. Services were A pril 13 at Bateman Funeral Chapel w ith in te rm e n t at Douglaaa Cemetery in Troutdale Harold Batchelor Services for Harold Bruce Batchelor, 27. of 22672 SE McCabe Road, Sandy, were last Wednesday at the Bateman Funeral Chapel. B a tch elo r died A p ril 9 following a tractor accident. He attended D avid Douglas High School and served in the Marines He had been em ployed at Reynolds Aluminum as a carbon setter and had re ce n tly served aa shop steward for the union He was a c tiv e in the Meadow land L ittle I x*ague program He is survived by h b wife, Darlene, whom he m arried in 1969 in P o rtb n d , and three children, Daniel J . John R., and Tanya J., all living at home He also b survived bv hb parenb Harold Batchelor, Po rtb nd and M r» Fran k York it Lincoln City. One brother, Kim Bachelor in the A ir Force, ab o survives, Burial was In W ilb m e tte National Cemetery. Services planned for crash victim ’2.49 M id g e Teasers designate a study area in Clackamas and Multnomah 1, 2, 3, 4 Lb. m on Eggs M e m o ria l services a re scheduled Friday in Vancouver for a form er Gresham-area resident who died in the March 27 Canary Island plane crash. She is M rs . C a rly le (Elizabeth) Brown, daughter of Mrs Cecelia la rs e n of 65 NW Florence, Gresham Mrs. Brown lived for several years on Birdadale Avenue (201st) between S b rk and G lban, and her son, Hugh Moore, graduated from Cen tennbl High School. She was a bookkeeper at the Multnomah County F a rm In Troutdale for several years and worked for the B o n n e ville Pow er A dm inbtration before her m arriage to Brown Brown’s remains have been returned to Vancouver for services but M rs Brow n’s have not yet been identified. They w ere en ro u te to a M editerranean vacation a t the time of the mishap. Mrs Brown was a m em ber of St. Ixike’a Episcopal parish while living in Gresham Her parents owned and operated the Eggers Berry F a rm near Sandy for a number ot years Brown was a section head at the B P A ’s D ittm e r Control Center at Hazel Dell. In addition to her son and her mother, M rs Brown is sur vived by a brother, John F. Eggers, of Mountain View, Ark She would have been 50 on April 17. W H IN WE RECONDITION YOUR AIR CONDITIONER. WE M A K I THE M IC E AS COMFORTABLE AS YOUR CAR W« II char«a y a m ratrlgaran«. chedi a n tlra •y *te m te r leali*, chack a ll h o w *. a 4 |u *t a ll bolts a»b chock the system for propor output. All thia for only WILLIAMS THRIFTWAY 668-4240 17450 Meinig Ave., Sandy, Ore. Hoodland Park Thriftway Welches Rd., Wemme 622-3244 29” (F o rtt Additional) PETE CARLSON H um 1 SAND / Ï